Toronto at Tampa Bay, September 20-22

Friday, September 20 2024 @ 10:00 AM EDT

Contributed by: Magpie

Mr. President, Mr. Immigration Man
Let me in, sweetie, to your fair land
I’m Tampa bound, and Memphis too
Short Fat Fanny is on the loose


One last road series, and then homeward bound. To play out the string.

I want to talk about tonight's starter. You've probably noticed that Jose Berrios has already established a new career high with his 16 Wins. To this point he's also posted a career best 3.44 ERA. This has not been a typical Berrios season, but possibly not for the reasons you might expect. What strikes me is how much this current season has in common with the often ugly results we saw from him in 2022.

In his eight full seasons, since 2017, Berrios has generally been right around the league average in striking out hitters - the MLB average is 22.4% of the hitters, and Berrios' career mark is 22.7%. He's averaged at least 8.5 Ks per 9 innings over his career. This year, however, his K's were all the way down to 7.0 per 9. The only other time he failed to fan at least 8.5 per 9 over a full season was in 2022, when he was down to 7.9 per 9. Those are the only times he's failed to strike out at least 22% of the opposition, being down around 19% on both occasions.

Berrios has also been right around the MLB average in allowing Home Runs - 1.2 per 9 innings, a homer in 3.3% of the Plate Appearances. The two years when he gave up more long balls? That would be 2022 and 2024, iallowing a career high 29 HRs (so far) both times, 3.9% of opposition Plate Appearances..

What's going on?

It's the Balls In Play, of course. Over his career, the opposition has hit .291 on their Balls In Play against Berrios, which is mighty close to the MLB average of .295 over this period. You can probably guess which two years deviate quite sharply from that established level - in 2022, the opposition hit a robust .329 on their Balls In Play, which in combination with the additional Home Runs helped generate that ugly 5.23 ERA. The HRs haven't hurt nearly so much this season when the opposition, for whatever reason, is hitting only .250 on their Balls In Play. Hence the career best ERA.

Another thing. I don't think Berrios is anybody's idea of a true ace. I think he's generally regarded as a quality starting pitcher who always gives his teams a chance to win. And they do. The Blue Jays have  played .632 ball in his 108 starts for Toronto, a figure no one in franchise history even comes close to matching, and I'll bet no one even suspected that to be the case. But there have been 32 pitchers who have started 75 games for the Blue Jays, and here is how the team has fared in each man's starts:

Pitcher          STARTS   W      L    PCT     Rest of Team
                
Jose Berrios    106    67    39    .632 .521
Doyle Alexander    103    63    40    .612 .573
David Wells    138    83    55    .601 .543
Mark Buehrle    97    58    39    .598 .494
Roy Halladay    287   171   116    .596 .487
Alek Manoah    75    44    31    .587 .533
Jimmy Key    250   145   105    .580 .560
A.J. Burnett    80    45    35    .563 .549

Mike Flanagan    76    42    34    .553 .559
Dave Stieb    408   225   183    .551 .501
Kevin Gausman    91    50    41    .549 .527
Brandon Morrow    93    51    42    .548 .488
J.A. Happ    127    69    58    .543 .472
Juan Guzman    195   105    90    .538 .503
Shaun Marcum    95    51    44    .537 .524
Pat Hentgen    238   127   111    .534 .472

John Cerutti    108    57    51    .528 .551
Todd Stottlemyre   175    91    84    .520 .557
Luis Leal    151    78    73    .517 .499
Kelvim Escobar    101    52    49    .515 .520
Marco Estrada    120    61    59    .508 .508
Ricky Romero    127    64    63    .504 .480
Marcus Stroman    129    64    65    .496 .476
Jim Clancy    344   168   176    .488 .471

R.A. Dickey    130    63    67    .485 .533
Ted Lilly    89    43    46    .483 .482
Chris Carpenter    135    63    72    .467 .509
Aaron Sanchez    92    42    50    .457 .496
Josh Towers    89    39    50    .438 .506
Woody Williams    76    33    43    .434 .500
Dave Lemanczyk    82    29    53    .354 .362
Jesse Jefferson    91    32    59    .352 .362

All things are not created equal, which is the point of that final column which gives the team's winning percentage when some other guy was starting. As you can see,. Berrios has pitched for better teams than, say, Roy Halladay did during his Blue Jays career.  But even so, Berrios has risen further above his teams than Doc was able to do, and the fact that they were better teams actually increases the degree of difficulty. The Jays played .521 ball when Berrios wasn't the starter - their winning percentage improved .111 when he took the mound. Halladay comes so close that he essentially matches that performance - teams that played .487 ball behind the other starters improved by .109 when Doc was the starter. Mark Buehrle is the only other starter in the same area code as Berrios and Halladay, although Happ, Hentgen, Morrow, Wells, Manoah and Stieb were also significantly better than the rest of the team. (Woody Williams and Josh Towers were significantly worse; Marco Estrada and Ted Lilly was almost a perfect match.)

I am of course afraid that now I've gone and put a hex on him. All I can say in my defense is that it's 2024, so who cares, anyway?

Matchups

Fri 20 Sep - Berrios (16-9, 3.44) vs TBD
Sat 21 Sep - Rodriguez (1-6, 4.29) vs Bradley (6-11, 4.39)
Sun 22 Sep - Bassitt (10-13, 4.16) vs Baz (3-3, 4.21)

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